What are the classes of nucleic acids?
What is the structure of DNA?
What are the functions of nucleic acids (DNA, mRNA, tRNA, rRNA)?
General structure of nucleic acids (and what is the bond that joins nucleic acids together)
Purine bases…
Pyrimidine bases…
Bases, nucleosides, nucleotides…
Structure of tRNA…
What are the minimum daily intake requirements for calcium (female, male, growing skeleton, osteoporosis, and maximum)?
Define ‘adjusted calcium’ (laboratory test) and it’s use.
How is calcium stored in bone (what form?)? (and what is bound in bone with Ca)
What effects does acidosis and alkalosis have on calcium binding to proteins?
What is the response to decreased circulating calcium and how does PTH act?
PTH acts in 3 ways:
- promotes Ca reabsorption via kidney
- stimulates osteoclast resorption of bone releasing Ca
- drives 1,25 vit D production in kidney which results in increased Ca absorption via the gut
What is the most common and important calcium-sensing receptor defect?
What are the clinical symptoms of hypercalcaemia and what is the most common cause?
What are the clinical symptoms of hypocalcaemia and what are some causes?
Symptoms:
- paraesthesia, muscle spasm, tetany, seizures, coma, Chvostek’s sign (hypersensitivty of facial nerve), Trousseau’s sign (involuntary contractions of muscles in hand/wrist), cardiac problems
Causes:
- renal failure, hypoparathyroidism, vit D deficiency/malabsorption
Trabecular (or cancellous or spongy) bone…
Cortical or compact bone…
What type of collagen is the bone matrix made out of and what are the 2 patterns in which collagen can be laid down?
Can be laid down as…
- woven bone: immature form with random fibre orientation, laid down during rapid growth and fracture repair
- lamellar bone: composed of successive layers of collagen fibres with distinct orientation
Lamellar bone…
Woven bone in Paget disease…
Structure of bones…
Structure of a child’s bone…
What is the function of osteoblasts, osteocytes, and osteoclasts?